We have had the opportunity to visit Australia. This is a land of very
unusual conditions and surprising forms of life. Until man brought
other forms of life to Australia, all of the life forms of warm-blooded
animals in Australia were marsupials. What that means is that, instead
of the baby developing to near self-sufficiency inside its mother and
then being born, the baby is born shortly after conception and develops
in a pouch outside the mother's body. A baby horse is a placental
mammal and not a marsupial, and within hours after being born is up and
walking around. A baby kangaroo is less than an inch long and will
spend months in the mother's pouch before it even attempts to walk.

In 1998, a group of scientists found a marsupial mouse called the
Julia Creek dunnart that was the size of a rice grain when it is born.
Weighing in at .015 grams, the animal was not big enough to have lungs
or muscle structures to operate them. The question was how the animal
could survive without breathing? Now another animal called the Tammar
wallaby has been shown to be the same kind of creature. In both cases,
that animal eventually develops lungs and breathes normally; but in the
case of the dunnart, it takes several weeks.

Both of these animals breathe through their skin. The
skin surface allows toxic gases to diffuse out and oxygen replace them,
enabling the animal to carry on a respiration that sustains life even
in the confines of the pouch. Much of the creation in which we live is
made up of animals so small that we do not notice them; but as we study
them and see how they operate and the design that enables them to
survive, we have to be amazed at all the different methods that the
Creator used to allow life on this planet to be as diverse and as
marvelous as it is.